The proposal has come under fire from Greens communications spokesperson Scott Ludlam, who said last week that the proposal is a "systematic erosion of privacy".

"This extreme proposal is based on the notion that all our personal data should be stored by service providers so that every move we make can be surveilled or recalled for later data mining," he said. "It comes from a mindset that imagines all Australians as potential criminal suspects, or mindless consumer drones whose every transaction should be recorded and mapped."

Electronic Frontiers Australia (EFA) branded the proposal as a "threat to civil liberties and privacy".

It's difficult not to be cynical about online petitions, particularly those from groups like GetUp that put one out on a different pet topic almost every week. The group's own recent effort to get hundreds of thousands of signatures in favour of same-sex marriage was derided by the Australian Christian Lobby for failing to get many signatures, and that's a pretty mainstream issue.

I don't imagine that GetUp is going to get all that many signatures outside of the core group of geeks and libertarians concerned about this plan. Trying to get the average Joe on the street interested in the privacy concerns around data retention is much different to signing a petition about same-sex marriage or the carbon tax or asylum seekers.

I can't imagine the question coming up on Q&A any time soon.

And even if you can get people to listen, how do you get the public concerned about these changes, when you've got the government invoking the 11 September attacks (page 4 of the discussion paper) and stating that it's fighting terrorists in calling for these extra powers?

Author John Birmingham has tried to get people fired up on the issue, suggesting that the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) could be looking through your pr0n. He reckons that the only way the issue will capture the attention of the public is if it becomes the centre of leadership tensions in the Labor Party, and thus every media outlet in the country begins reporting on it.

It's hardly going to be an election-deciding issue, either. At the most, I think you can currently compare it to the internet filter. In the 2010 election, the Coalition came out against mandatory internet filtering, while Labor was still committed to the policy. In the end, I doubt it had much of an effect on the outcome of that election. The National Broadband Network (NBN) did for sure; internet filtering, not so much.

Instead of online petitions, I think that the key to getting the government to reconsider this proposal will be the internet service providers (ISPs). Requiring them to retain two years' worth of data for every customer is a huge ask, and will come with massive storage and security costs for the ISP. If the government isn't willing to pay for this, then the ISPs are going to pass that cost onto their customers. At the same time, the government is trying to show off how prices for services on the NBN are also going to end up being cheaper than what we're paying for ADSL today.

How will the government be able to argue that the NBN is leading to cheaper internet costs, when a government policy may force ISPs to raise their prices?

Add to that the leak scenario: all it takes is for one ISP not to secure this data, and everyone's tentacle pr0n and private details could be exposed to the wide world.

I suspect that these two arguments will be much more convincing than an e-petition.

What do you think? What's the best way to get people fired up about data retention?

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